"My trainer (Dave Dalton) based my character around that. That's how I
became a villain," the petite 18-year-old says.

When Grattan becomes her stage character Portia Perez, her personality is
markedly different. The teen works at angering the crowd and the more boos she
gets from wrestling fans the better.

"There's not going to be much reaction if they don't hate you," she says.
"I take certain aspects of my personality and amplify them."

Grattan, who has been a licenced wrestler for about 18 months, is a high school senior at
St. Mary Catholic High School in Brockville, Ontario, and one of
three local young people working with the UWA.

Allan Irish, of North Augusta, and Phil Plume, Prescott, have been in the
business for a couple of years. All three train together in Ottawa and this
summer they will tour together in eastern Canada with UWA.

The UWA has a show Saturday, April 30 at The Legion Royale, 231 Maloney Blvd. West, in
Gatineau, Quebec, headlined by Bobby Roode vs A1. But the highlight for the trio will be their first appearance on home turf when the UWA hosts a show May 28 at the Brockville Memorial Centre.

"We're all really excited about it," says Plume, who attended South
Grenville District High School. It's a chance for friends to see him perform,
he says.

"I used to not tell anyone," Grattan says of her wrestling, partly because
people didn't believe it.

"They'd say I was too small and say it was for people who aren't smart
enough to get real jobs," says Grattan.

The trio admits they're not earning big pay right now and most wrestlers,
unless they become famous, have other jobs too. That doesn't take away from
the desire to get out in the ring, they say.

Grattan has wanted to be a wrestler all her life. She recalls having a Hulk
Hogan poster over her crib as a child.

"It's all his fault," she says jokingly of Hogan.

Allan Irish aka, Taylor

Irish, 20, and Plume, 19, are childhood friends who have shared a lot of
interests, including wrestling.

Plume, whose stage name is the Prodigy Zack Storm, said he got the bug for
wrestling when his brother rented Wrestlemania and he watched it dozens of
times. Before he knew it, he was going to wrestling schools, including the
Wrestling Formation School and the Battleground Academy.

Irish, known by fans as Taylor (a good guy), started wrestling in his
backyard. He later trained in Gatineau and now has a replica of his trainer's
ring in an outbuilding at his family's North Augusta home.

Prior to the Brockville show, Plume and Irish will do a two-week tour in
Alberta and Saskatchewan.

They insist training is essential and wrestlers must be licensed. It's not
easy to not hurt people while appearing to slice and dice them, they say.
Injuries, despite training, are common.

"You have to be driven," Irish says. "The bumps, the bruises, the pain
would get to anybody.

"You don't learn how to fake fight. You learn how to walk through a match
step by step," adds Plume, who typically plays a bad guy who makes his
long-time friend Irish look good in the ring.

"I go out there and make such an ass of myself that they have to cheer for
him," says Plume of Irish.

It takes a lot of work and perseverance, they say.

"As to why someone would do this, I really don't know," says Irish, who
recalls getting wrestling figures as a boy. "We all grew up with it," he adds,
recalling how they would practice in his backyard.

"An English teacher told me once I could do anything I wanted to if I
worked hard enough. She told me you don't have dreams for no reason," says
Irish, and wrestling is his dream.

"I can't explain it at all," adds Plume of why he is willing to risk injury
in the ring in the name of entertainment. "I've been asked that by 25 people."

Grattan says wrestling is her life. "I can't ever remember not wanting to
do it. It's part of who I am.